Attack on Scottish local government workers exposes factional
struggle in Labour Party
By Steve James
31 July 1998
The Labour government has instructed two Scottish local authorities
to close down their Direct Labour Organisations (DLOs) and contract-out
their operations to private companies. The closures in North Lanarkshire
and East Ayrshire authorities will begin immediately and are to
be completed by May next year with 500 and 1,600 jobs threatened
respectively.
Most Local Authorities operate DLOs to maintain public amenities,
housing and roads. During the years of Conservative rule, a large
portion of their operations were put up for tender, i.e. contracted-out
to whoever offered the lowest bid for the service, either the
DLO itself or a private company. Thus DLOs only survived by cutting
jobs and increasing productivity. Many trade union bureaucrats
found a well-paid job administering the DLOs.
Labour's present attack shows that they regard the dismantling
of the DLOs as an urgent task. This has two purposes. Firstly,
to break up a large group of workers and prevent any opposition
they might launch to the destruction of Local Authority services,
and secondly to open these workers up as a source of profit for
private capital.
The attack also reveals a vicious faction fight within the
Labour Party between those allied to private contract companies
and those in the party apparatus most closely tied to the Local
Authority services. A media campaign has been waged to associate
pay levels for council workers with local government corruption
by dishonestly connecting council workers' pay and conditions
with the bribery, theft, criminal connections and junketing for
which Scottish councils are notorious.
Earlier this year, North Lanarkshire and East Ayrshire announced
that their DLOs were running at a loss. North Lanarkshire DLO
ran up a £4.6 million operating loss last year and East
Ayrshire lost £3.5 million. The press launched a frenzied
attack on local government "cronyism" and cited one
plumber who allegedly earned £54,000 last year. The implication
was that all DLO workers received similar wages and that this
was the source of the corruption in local government.
The council leaders, Harry McGuigan of North Lanarkshire and
David Snellor of East Ayrshire, offered to make good the deficit
by slashing wages, sacking workers and increasing productivity.
North Lanarkshire has already sacked 143 workers, cut overtime,
bonus payments, postponed new projects and sworn that no work
will be undertaken unless it is profitable. East Ayrshire has
appointed a task force to oversee cuts, including the sacking
of 100 workers.
The issue also dominated the unseemly squabble over Labour
nominations for the upcoming elections to the new Scottish Parliament.
Both McGuigan and Snellor sought Labour backing for the lucrative
position as Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP). Whereas the
Labour Party very publicly rejected both, Glasgow Council leader
Frank McAveety, who has pushed through privatisations in Glasgow,
was accepted.
McGuigan and Snellor's pleas that they are not opposed to cuts
or to running local services for a profit were to no avail. Under
direct instruction from Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair, Scottish
Secretary of State Donald Dewar, once thought to be the most likely
candidate for First Minister of the new Scottish Parliament, insisted
on July 23 that all DLO work had to be transferred to the private
sector.
See Also:
Dramatic rise
in support for the Scottish National Party
[31 July 1998]
Asian crisis
blasts through Scotland's "Silicon Glen"
[8 July 1998]
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